Rightly Guided Thieves kick off Carnival at Bones Gate
If you walk into the depths of the Hopkins Center late at night, winding around the dark corridors towards practice room 29, a sweetly unique sound pounds through the closed door.
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If you walk into the depths of the Hopkins Center late at night, winding around the dark corridors towards practice room 29, a sweetly unique sound pounds through the closed door.
After many months of grueling rehearsals, forced abandonment of friends and even food to sing and dance their hearts out day after day, the Dartmouth Glee Club finally got the chance to strut its stuff. This past weekend, the group performed Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical "Evita" to sold out crowds in Spaulding Auditorium, wowing everyone from community members to students and even some visiting parents. The musical tells the tale of a second tier Argentinean actress' rise to power in the 1940s as the wife of the Argentinean dictator Juan Peron. Evita became the love of Argentina with her championing efforts for the poor and for women's rights. The tale was made popular with the 1996 big-budget film starring Madonna; however the Glee Club, with its student-run production, put Hollywood to shame.
It's Friday night and the Daniel Webster in you is just rearing to go. Go? "Go where," you ask? Why would a party aficionado such as yourself waste precious nighttime hours wandering in search of the hottest spot? It simply would not do. Whether your sin of choice is shaking your tailfeather all night long or simply sharpening your pong skills with some good background tunes, there is a place on Webster Avenue to indulge all of your musical desires.
The steamy details of that sex tape, behind-the-scenes dirt on walking the famous runways of Milan, what it's like to party with rock gods and movie stars, and, of course, what it feels like to be filthy rich: that's what the reader expects to get when they delve into Paris Hilton's new book, "Confessions of an Heiress: A Tongue-in-Chic Peek Behind the Pose." The book was recently released by Simon and Schuster and was hardly greeted with a line around the block. Those who actually did buy the book got just exactly what you would expect from someone that didn't even graduate from high school: a huge flop.
Dartmouth, you're going to go insane -- not because of midterms or papers, though. This Friday night, Rightly Guided Thieves' sexy sounds are going to seduce you and drive you over the edge.
It's a wonder that so much attention has been lavished on a little British movie about a bunch of women with saggy boobs. But such is the success of the sleeper hit "Calendar Girls." The story keeps the audience smiling and giggling throughout the film.
Creepy figures lurked in the shadows, eerie music echoed throughout the auditorium -- and yet the seats steadily filled. But, the spooky and off-putting atmosphere did not repel. Rather it drew people into its depths. The time was 8 p.m., the place was Moore Theatre, and the audience, well, no one could have prepared them for what was to come.
Big jewels, bags of silver and gold and a gang of bandits are exactly what the film "El Automovil Gris" delivered over the weekend at Loew Auditorium. Mixing elements of American, Mexican and Japanese cultures, the film was rather difficult to get a grasp on.
Recycled Percussion, the insanely high-energy band visiting the Dartmouth campus this Friday, is anything but garbage, even if their music is made from trash.
As the lights dimmed, a hush of anticipation fell upon the packed Spaulding Auditorium. A short man dressed in a black Hungarian suit crossed the stage, walking towards a gleaming, black Steinway concert piano.
Next year may take your average '04 to Wall Street or Cape Town, to a law firm, inner-city public school or clandestine service. Today and Thursday, that daunting array of choices will be on full display at the Career Services' Not-For-Profit and Employer Information fairs.